The classic Drucker-Prager model uses three constants: cohesion value, angle of internal friction, and dilatancy angle. The dilatancy angle controls the amount of volume increase when the material yields. If the dilatancy angle equals the friction angle, the flow rule is associative with plastic strain normal to the yield surface. A lower dilatancy angle results in less volume increase, while a zero angle means no volume change upon yielding.
The classic Drucker-Prager model uses three constants: cohesion value, angle of internal friction, and dilatancy angle. The dilatancy angle controls the amount of volume increase when the material yields. If the dilatancy angle equals the friction angle, the flow rule is associative with plastic strain normal to the yield surface. A lower dilatancy angle results in less volume increase, while a zero angle means no volume change upon yielding.
The classic Drucker-Prager model uses three constants: cohesion value, angle of internal friction, and dilatancy angle. The dilatancy angle controls the amount of volume increase when the material yields. If the dilatancy angle equals the friction angle, the flow rule is associative with plastic strain normal to the yield surface. A lower dilatancy angle results in less volume increase, while a zero angle means no volume change upon yielding.
tb,edp,2,1,2,LYFUN tbdata,1,1.41833,2.02558 tb,edp,2,1,2,LFPOT tbdata,1,1.20,2.02558 Material 4 fi=33 deg c=1.0 t/m2 fi0=30 deg tb,edp,4,1,2,LYFUN tbdata,1,1.3309,2.0494 tb,edp,4,1,2,LFPOT tbdata,1,1.20,2.0494 ___________________________________________________________________ to delete tbde,edp,2 tbde,edp,4 ___________________________________________________________________ Example3.11:Classic Drucker-Prager MP,EX,1,5000 MP,NUXY,1,0.27 TB,DP,1 TBDATA,1,2.9,32,0 ! Cohesion = 2.9 (use consistent units), ! Angle of internal friction = 32 degrees, ! Dilatancy angle = 0 degrees ___________________________________________________________________ Example3.12:EDP -- Linear Yield Criterion and Flow Potential /prep7 !!! Define linear elasticity constants mp,ex,1,2.1e4 mp,nuxy,1,0.45 ! Extended Drucker-Prager Material Model Definition ! Linear Yield Function tb,edp,1,1,2,LYFUN tbdata,1,2.2526,7.894657 ! Linear Plastic Flow Potential tb,edp,1,1,2,LFPOT tbdata,1,0.566206,7.894657 ___________________________________________________________________ Example3.13:EDP -- Power Law Yield Criterion and Flow Potential /prep7 !!! Define linear elasticity constants mp,ex,1,2.1e4 mp,nuxy,1,0.45 ! Extended Drucker-Prager Material Model Definition ! Power Law Yield Function tb,edp,1,1,3,PYFUN tbdata,1,8.33,1.5 ! Power Law Plastic Flow Potential tb,edp,1,1,2,PFPOT tbdata,1,8.33,1.5 ___________________________________________________________________ Example3.14:EDP -- Hyperbolic Yield Criterion and Flow Potential /prep7 !!! Define linear elasticity constants mp,ex,1,2.1e4 mp,nuxy,1,0.45 ! Extended Drucker-Prager Material Model Definition ! Hyperbolic Yield Function tb,edp,1,1,3,HYFUN tbdata,1,1.0,1.75,7.89 ! Hyperbolic Plastic Flow Potential tb,edp,1,1,2,HFPOT tbdata,1,1.0,1.75 ___________________________________________________________________ Example3.15:EDP Cap Model Material Constant Input /prep7 ! Define linear elasticity constants mp,ex ,1,14e3 mp,nuxy,1,0.0 ! Cap yield function tb,edp ,1,1,,cyfun tbdata,1,2 ! Rc tbdata,2,1.5 ! Rt tbdata,3,-80 ! Xi tbdata,4,10 ! SIGMA tbdata,5,0.001 ! B tbdata,6,2 ! A tbdata,7,0.05 ! ALPHA tbdata,8,0.9 ! PSI ! Define hardening for cap-compaction portion tbdata,9,0.6 ! W1c tbdata,10,3.0/1000 ! D1c tbdata,11,0.0 ! D2c ! Cap plastic flow potential function tb,edp ,1,1,,cfpot tbdata,1,2 ! RC tbdata,2,1.5 ! RT tbdata,3,0.001 ! B tbdata,4,0.05 ! ALPHA The classic Drucker-Prager model [10] is applicable to granular (frictional) mat erial such as soils, rock, and concrete and uses the outer cone approximation to the Mohr-Coulomb law. The input consists of only three constants: Cohesion value (> 0) Angle of internal friction Dilatancy angle The amount of dilatancy (the increase in material volume due to yielding) can be controlled via the dilatancy angle. If the dilatancy angle is equal to the fric tion angle, the flow rule is associative. If the dilatancy angle is zero (or les s than the friction angle), there is no (or less of an) increase in material vol ume when yielding and the flow rule is non-associated. The dilatancy angle (the input dilatancy constant). When dilatancy angle = frictio n angle, the flow rule is associated and plastic straining occurs normal to the yield surface and there will be a volumetric expansion of the material with plas tic strains. If dilatancy angle is less than friction angle there will be less v olumetric expansion and if dilatancy angle is zero, there will be no volumetric expansion.